How Other Presidents Reacted to Abraham Lincoln's Death

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • The reactions of several presidents to the death of Abraham Lincoln have been well documented. Previous and future presidents had different relationships with Lincoln yet almost universally mourned his death and reacted with expressions of grief and sadness.
    0:00 Introduction
    0:09 Millard Fillmore
    1:42 Franklin Pierce
    3:21 James Buchanan
    4:20 Andrew Johnson
    5:24 Ulysses S. Grant
    6:26 Rutherford B. Hayes
    7:07 James A. Garfield
    8:30 Later Presidents
    On April 14, 1865 Lincoln was attending the Ford's Theatre with his wife Mary Todd Lincoln when he was shot in the back of the head by Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth. He died the following day on April 15, 1865. At the time President Abraham Lincoln was killed three former presidents were still living along with eleven men who would one day become president.
    His predecessors, Democrats Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan were often in political opposition to the Republican President. Buchanan spoke in a letter to Horatio King about how he had admired Lincoln and considered his death to be a great loss to the nation. Pierce the death as a tragedy yet seemed to show less remorse as his house wasn't decorated in black drapes. Former President Pierce had been one of Lincoln's fiercest critics and had been a friend of Jefferson Davis. He blamed President Lincoln personally and solely for the Civil War.
    13th President Millard Fillmore was the earliest president still living at the time Booth killed Lincoln. He and his militia in Buffalo, New York personally escorted Lincoln's funeral train during the procession.
    The Civil War general presidents - Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes and James A. Garfield had some of the best documented reactions to Lincoln's killing. They were all fellow Republicans who shared camaraderie in the Union Cause of anti-slavery. Perhaps most devastated of all was Grant who considered Lincoln not just a commander or political ally but also a friend.
    Andrew Johnson was serving as Abraham Lincoln's Vice President and would go on to take the office for himself. He reacted with rage upon learning of the shooting and vowed revenge on John Wilkes Booth and the other conspirators.
    Less is known of the reactions of later presidents such as Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley. Even later American Presidents such as Theodore Roosvelt, William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson were only children; however, a photo of Lincoln's funeral procession does feature Teddy Roosevelt (along with his brother Elliot) among the watchers. Reacts
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Komentáře • 840

  • @iammaxhailme
    @iammaxhailme Před rokem +2121

    hearing that people just walked up to an ex-president's house (pierce) and heckled him shows how different the world was

    • @xeixi3789
      @xeixi3789 Před rokem +37

      Fr

    • @logananderson8395
      @logananderson8395 Před rokem +9

      On gahd on gahd

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před rokem

      I like that more than the veneration of the office we ostensibly have today. It’s hard to believe in a sacrosanct public figurehead when we’ve had a perjury-committing adulterer, a jingoistic buffoon, the ineffectual Obama, another perjury-committing adulterer who committed treason, and now a senile old man.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před rokem +16

      Really glad you pointed that out!

    • @toohacked
      @toohacked Před rokem +135

      Nowadays the “poors” aren’t allowed near the president lol. Soon Washington DC will have a minimum wealth for residency

  • @dr.veronica6155
    @dr.veronica6155 Před rokem +2253

    Also worth mentioning that Grant partially blamed himself for Lincoln's death due to the fact that he had been invited to join him, and as such felt that he should have been there to protect him.

    • @padre619
      @padre619 Před rokem +92

      Nahhh dude I’d be there for my homie Lincoln if I was grant that’s kinda shitty, not like shitty on him that just sucks

    • @TheMasonK
      @TheMasonK Před rokem +266

      @@padre619 it had more to do with Lincoln’s wife treating Grant’s wife horribly. The Rathbones went in their place. Sadly Mr. Rathbone went insane after the assassination and years later killed his own wife I believe.

    • @PotterPossum1989
      @PotterPossum1989 Před rokem +14

      Grant should have gone, he could have gotten a twofer.

    • @RRW359
      @RRW359 Před rokem

      Didn't Booth plan on that and wanted to kill him as well?

    • @TheMasonK
      @TheMasonK Před rokem +32

      @@RRW359 yes Grant was also originally a target.

  • @khalifbrown2709
    @khalifbrown2709 Před rokem +452

    Fillmore is always somewhere else when big events happen

  • @florianseaman6289
    @florianseaman6289 Před rokem +1252

    It really also speaks volumes that the Confederate President Jefferson Davis himself seemed to at least somewhat mourn Lincoln, after Lincoln was shot and killed Davis wrote in a memoir „Next to the end of the Confederacy itself, the Death of Abraham Lincoln was the darkest day for South“

    • @jacobite2353
      @jacobite2353 Před rokem +1

      Nah that traitor Johnson allowed the Southern democrats to hold onto power, it was definitely a good event for the southern treasonous hags.

    • @kylec.9092
      @kylec.9092 Před rokem +253

      Besides Grant and a select few, Lincoln was one of the only people who wanted to attempt reconstruction, let alone for it to succeed. Davis was probably shocked when he was pardoned and thankful to Lincoln's administration for allowing him to live free in the union once again. He possibly, reluctantly, envisioned a world where the South might be able to peacefully coexist with their once great enemy and move on as if the war never happened, but upon Lincoln's death, he must've known that could never happen until they were long gone.

    • @villadelrefugio
      @villadelrefugio Před rokem +103

      Sounds a lot like Admiral Yamamoto after the Pearl Harbour attaks in Hawaii where he is recorded saying in lament "We have awoken the sleeping giant"

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před rokem +63

      Of course Davis spent the rest of his memoirs painting Lincoln as a war-mongering tyrant, so it’s hard to take that one sentence seriously

    • @sharplydressedrabbit3604
      @sharplydressedrabbit3604 Před rokem +37

      He was right. Lincoln's death brought with it the end of the successful reintegration of the South. Something that was only alleviated many decades later.

  • @glnnchrstphr9717
    @glnnchrstphr9717 Před rokem +1174

    "The greatest man I have ever known." Quote by George Santos.

    • @robertboekee8733
      @robertboekee8733 Před rokem +32

      😂😂

    • @mr.joshua6818
      @mr.joshua6818 Před rokem +163

      If I remember correctly, he pursued John Wilkes Booth on foot until a squad of Confederate ninjas swarmed in. He defeated all 50 single handedly, though they gave Booth enough time to make his escape.

    • @owlcowl
      @owlcowl Před rokem +21

      Nope, thats actually a quote from Anthony Duvolder.

    • @dakotabrignac7415
      @dakotabrignac7415 Před rokem +51

      @@mr.joshua6818 After he beat them he gave them a speech about being better and they all clapped.
      Edit: shit spelling

    • @mr.joshua6818
      @mr.joshua6818 Před rokem +4

      @@dakotabrignac7415 definitely.

  • @ethanfairweather8736
    @ethanfairweather8736 Před rokem +223

    For the record, Abraham Lincoln was Theodore Roosevelt’s hero. He idolized President Lincoln.

    • @stanandollie7041
      @stanandollie7041 Před rokem +1

      More fool him.

    • @LiteralCrimeRave
      @LiteralCrimeRave Před rokem +32

      @@stanandollie7041 ?

    • @PreziesLover327
      @PreziesLover327 Před rokem +12

      Teedie, as he was called then, was just a child of 6 1/2 when Lincoln was slain, but he was aware that the great President was assassinated, and was even photographed in the window of his home when the Lincoln funeral train was passing through.

    • @danielkaranja7978
      @danielkaranja7978 Před rokem +1

      @@ethanfairweather8736 By Eleanor Roosevet, are you referring specifically to FDR's wife? If so, she was definitely born after Lincoln's assassination.

    • @ethanfairweather8736
      @ethanfairweather8736 Před rokem +3

      @@Koopalingfan in October of 1902 there was a massive coal strike in America. Theodore Roosevelt was recovering from a carriage accident at the time. While he was recovering, he read this multivolume biography on Abraham Lincoln by Nicolay & Hay. There were times when Abraham Lincoln had to suspend basic constitutional rights because we were in a Civil War. Roosevelt used that as precedent to order the army to run the coal mines themselves. He basically threatened to nationalize the coal industry. His grounds for involving the military on domestic affairs was that he was in a war too. Not a who, but a white: chaos. It was October and winter was coming.

  • @davidpumpkinsjr.5108
    @davidpumpkinsjr.5108 Před rokem +436

    Fillmore was a dick, but people throwing ink at his house for not displaying signs of mourning when he wasn't even home; that's not cool.
    I'm surprised Franklin Pierce was sober enough to be that eloquent.
    Another reason Grant didn't go to the theater that night was because Julia Grant didn't like Mary Lincoln.

    • @dim6508
      @dim6508 Před rokem +43

      so the only time wife rivalries have been helpful for a husband?

    • @Gravelgratious
      @Gravelgratious Před rokem +88

      Cut Franklin Pierce slack for drinking. He did see his son get beheaded in a train accident on the way to Washington D.C

    • @JIMANGRYFOOTCOMICS
      @JIMANGRYFOOTCOMICS Před rokem +14

      Women right?

    • @darknessoftruth9314
      @darknessoftruth9314 Před rokem +18

      It was mostly because Mary Lincoln was horrible to the wives of the generals

    • @ryanhernandez8324
      @ryanhernandez8324 Před rokem +6

      Most reasonable American political mob

  • @ungusbungus2486
    @ungusbungus2486 Před rokem +211

    Garfield talking about Lincoln’s fate not knowing he would end up the same way:

    • @Mae_Dastardly
      @Mae_Dastardly Před rokem +26

      He should have given Charles Getout the job in paris

    • @Official.Prez.Graves
      @Official.Prez.Graves Před 11 měsíci +5

      McKinley didn’t see it coming either

    • @elagabalusrex390
      @elagabalusrex390 Před 9 měsíci +5

      His middle name was Abram too - very similar to Lincolns first name - how's that for a scary coincidence? I think maybe prospective presidents should avoid names like Abraham and Kennedy...seem to be a little cursed.

  • @west8715
    @west8715 Před 9 měsíci +33

    I'm honestly kind of shocked by the fact that there is a photo of Theodore Roosevelt at Lincoln's funeral procession, not only was this historic moment captured but it was preserved to the present.

    • @prettyshinyspaghetti8332
      @prettyshinyspaghetti8332 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Same here. We all know of the famous photo of JFK shaking hands with future President Clinton, but now there are 2 photos of a President and a future president in the same shot

  • @chriscothran8744
    @chriscothran8744 Před rokem +77

    I can imagine being in the crowd in front of Pierce's home and as he's halfway through his rant saying, "Just put the damn drapes up Frank."

    • @kevinstidham7321
      @kevinstidham7321 Před 3 měsíci +2

      “C’mon Frank, he has a point. It’s a pretty reasonable request and everyone else on the block has done it.
      It’s nice of us even to include you in this considering that Jeff Davis was your Secretary of War and we found that quasi-treasonous letter you sent him.”

  • @gregrambo606
    @gregrambo606 Před rokem +97

    "Manhunt. The 12 day search for Lincoln's killers" by John Swanson is about as riveting a book as you'll ever read about the assassination.

    • @resyndicated
      @resyndicated  Před rokem +10

      Added to the reading list. Thank you for the recommendation!

    • @jman52209
      @jman52209 Před rokem +6

      "Chasing lincoln's killer" by John Swanson as well is also a great read.

    • @maxeddie1789
      @maxeddie1789 Před rokem +2

      James L. Swanson, and he wrote both books

  • @cojiro9616
    @cojiro9616 Před rokem +40

    That's crazy that Roosevelt is in that photo of Lincoln's funeral procession.

  • @Skip2105
    @Skip2105 Před rokem +522

    Could you possibly do one about how different presidents reacted to John Tyler’s ascension? We’d love to hear your talented research on the subject

    • @resyndicated
      @resyndicated  Před rokem +117

      That's a good topic, provided there's enough information out there for a full video. Thank you for the suggestion.

    • @shahrulamar5358
      @shahrulamar5358 Před rokem +13

      Until few years ago 2 of President Tyler grandchildren were still alived. 😮😮

    • @MFPhoto1
      @MFPhoto1 Před rokem +12

      Read the book Accidental Presidents by Jered Cohen. It has some very interesting information on Tyler and his presidency.

    • @rehanakhund2578
      @rehanakhund2578 Před rokem +14

      @@shahrulamar5358 I believe one is still alive actually.

    • @pavan923
      @pavan923 Před rokem +6

      A video about reactions to his death would also be interesting given the fact that when the War began, Tyler opted to become a traitor and become a representative in the Confederate Congress, meaning the reactions would likely be very mixed

  • @judyradtke7433
    @judyradtke7433 Před rokem +59

    Even though Buchanan was a terrible president, at least he felt more sympathy at Lincoln 's assassination than Fillmore or Pierce.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před rokem +28

      I view Pierce as the actual worst, since he let Bloody Kansas start, condoned filibustering, etc. Buchanan “only” let the house continue to fall.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před rokem +4

      Fillmore wasn’t too bad though.

    • @dyhall
      @dyhall Před rokem +6

      Buchanan was a bad president by apathy. I never got the impression that he was a particularly bad person for the time, and it would have taken the greatest leader available to save the Union by the time he got into office. The wheels were already set in motion by his predecessors.

    • @LiteralCrimeRave
      @LiteralCrimeRave Před rokem

      @@dyhall Didn't he run the most corrupt administration in US history?

    • @smastudiosproductions8713
      @smastudiosproductions8713 Před rokem +10

      I should say that i usually defend Franklin Pierce because his kids (and wife, I believe she died in 1864) were all dead, and his son died three weeks before his inauguration. Pierce was really in no state to run a country. Besides, the civil war falls more on Buchanan's shoulders.

  • @nmgscp
    @nmgscp Před rokem +54

    Harding's reaction to Lincoln assassination: he kicked in his mother's belly

  • @tomsullivan6032
    @tomsullivan6032 Před rokem +58

    Martin Van Buren was on friendly terms with Abe.He lived until 1862.

  • @TheOriginalJphyper
    @TheOriginalJphyper Před rokem +28

    Even if they didn't like him, they still respected him. That's a trait that's sorely lacking among today's leaders.

  • @paulngpaulng7970
    @paulngpaulng7970 Před rokem +320

    Even as an Asian Chinese but one who knows a little about American history,I have a deep respect for Abraham Lincoln and what he did in the emancipation of slavery in your country.I will make mention his name to friends n strangers,that there is no world leaders like him,who is prepared to fight for the rights of another race and in the end be assasinated for it.Right to this day,his name still resounds in history as among one of the greatest man on earth.The word of God has this to say of people like Lincoln
    Proverbs, Chapter 10
    7. The memory of the righteous will be a blessing, but the name of the wicked will rot.
    Psalms 112:6
    Surely he will never be shaken; a righteous man will be remembered forever.
    Praise be to the Lord God Almighty for raising up a man such as this to lead a nation.

    • @faulltw
      @faulltw Před rokem +43

      Hello from America. Thank you for your kind words. I hope our two countries can be at peace

    • @ekibirigeable
      @ekibirigeable Před rokem +11

      Amen!

    • @timmayeaux2743
      @timmayeaux2743 Před rokem

      Lincoln was a lying fraud and atheist. His life and Lenin's were almost identical. both of failure, socialism and murder

    • @OldRoy
      @OldRoy Před rokem +2

      for another point of view on Lincoln - czcams.com/video/-pZG7snE7tU/video.html

    • @DeezNuggz
      @DeezNuggz Před rokem +4

      lmao 😂😂😂 yeah I can see you don't know much about him!

  • @superbearchrist1716
    @superbearchrist1716 Před rokem +60

    Knowing Woodrow Wilson, he probably later in life didn't care or thought it was a good thing seeing as Lincoln's policies as well as those close to him like Grant brought a lot of safety measures towards former slaves and was steps towards trying to fully unite without race being a factor. Wilson who passed Jim Crow nationwide and grew up in the South took a bunch of steps backwards which is often why I think he is one of if not the worst president in the nation's history putting people like a meek Buchanan in a positive light and even contesting with Calvin Coolidge whose policies helped bring the great depression though to be fair hoover didn't make it much better. If the enforcement acts stayed in place, I do believe desegregation could have happened earlier, and the influence of the Klan would have been greatly diminished on politics due to there actually being consequences.

    • @timber72
      @timber72 Před rokem +14

      Woodrow Wilson was not just one of the worst presidents we've ever had, he's one of the worst tyrants in all of human history.
      Woodrow Wilson's policies and ideology directly led to WWII, for example.

    • @elagabalusrex390
      @elagabalusrex390 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Wilson was horrible, especially if you think of all the rotten things we have to thank him for: 1)the establishment of the Federal Reserve, 2) the establishment of the federal income tax, 3) bringing the U.S. into WWI after promising not to, 4)pushing for Jim Crowe laws. A little known fact about Wilson: Practically his first act as president was to fire every black employee in the federal government that he could find.

  • @BNardolilli
    @BNardolilli Před rokem +10

    "He just died? Wow. I didn't know that...He led an amazing life. What else can you say?" - Andrew Johnson

  • @NicklasZandeVGCP2001
    @NicklasZandeVGCP2001 Před rokem +13

    Knowing how much Teddy admired Lincoln, I think he was absolutely angered and saddened by the news.

  • @ShadowShark619
    @ShadowShark619 Před rokem +238

    Nice video! You should do the same thing with JFK, I'm sure that one would be interesting

    • @timmayeaux2743
      @timmayeaux2743 Před rokem

      no one wants to talk about the insurrection of Nov. 22 1963. Like 9/11, killing JFK (and others) was an inside job.

    • @therealjoediaz
      @therealjoediaz Před rokem +19

      And Garfield and McKinley

    • @king_karnivore
      @king_karnivore Před rokem +5

      YES!!!

    • @nickmoser7785
      @nickmoser7785 Před rokem

      Papa doc claim that he was the one who killed JFK with a voodoo spell. I think the Soviets publicly condemned the assassination as well as Castro but their reactions were probably more elated in private

    • @heretustay
      @heretustay Před rokem +7

      second this! JFK would be very interesting

  • @hungarycountryball1056
    @hungarycountryball1056 Před rokem +54

    Filmore’s home getting attacked for not having morning drapes only because he was out of town must of made him at least a little pissed. 😊

  • @Bazoinkerz
    @Bazoinkerz Před rokem +10

    At 2:36
    I don't like Franklin Pierce, but he was honestly right to say this. He served his country as both president AND as a veteran of combat. I don't think he needs to justify his patriotism when his actions speak louder.

  • @supersaiyangodgoku4976
    @supersaiyangodgoku4976 Před rokem +93

    You taught me a lot, and I started researching myself. Franklin Pierce did so many things to agitate abolitionists, he made Buchanan in a worst situation honestly.

    • @mykoniichistorychannel
      @mykoniichistorychannel Před rokem +11

      Franklin Pierce I’d without a doubt the worst President we’ve had.

    • @ThGreat22
      @ThGreat22 Před rokem +4

      ​@@mykoniichistorychannel Andrew Johnson was much worse.

    • @elagabalusrex390
      @elagabalusrex390 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Well Pierce was a doughface (a southern state sympathizer). Ironic, really, given that he was born and grew up in New Hampshire, which was about as progressive a place as you could find in the U.S. at that time...He definitely did nothing to help the situation during his term, but I must assert that Buchanan's mistakes were his own.

  • @robertortiz-wilson1588
    @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před rokem +11

    Thank you for researching this and presenting it here! Fantastic information to know!

  • @saino2001
    @saino2001 Před rokem +42

    This is a fascinating account of opinions and reactions that I've never seen (or read) before, and I enjoyed it immensely.

  • @BallyBoy95
    @BallyBoy95 Před rokem +17

    Such a tiny channel with 3.83k subscribers, yet you've produced such a piece of gold. Really glad CZcams dropped this into my feed. Thanks for your hard work, I know research is rough (I have to do a fair share myself).

  • @CypherlineYT
    @CypherlineYT Před rokem +47

    I was the same guy who answered your question on quora about Arthur's reaction to Lincoln's death. At the time I didn't even know about your channel. such an odd interaction!

  • @user-yf6zz3cl8i
    @user-yf6zz3cl8i Před rokem +10

    My lord. Men of this age had grammar that was impeccable

  • @stephenpierce2242
    @stephenpierce2242 Před rokem +48

    Great video! I think another reason Pierce didn't like Lincoln is because I believe he was really good friends with Jefferson Davis. He had Davis as his Defense Secretary during his term

    • @alancoe1002
      @alancoe1002 Před rokem +15

      Or as we more honestly called the office back then, Secretary of War.

    • @PreziesLover327
      @PreziesLover327 Před rokem +2

      @Chris P Davis, who was released from prison a year before Pierce died, attended his ex-boss Pierce's funeral in the fall of 1869.

    • @leythonlopez-ty5dm
      @leythonlopez-ty5dm Před 9 měsíci

      They look alikd

  • @xdanbo1859
    @xdanbo1859 Před rokem +29

    I am not sure if it is true, but I thought the main reason that Grant did not attend the play. Is that Julia Grant did not like Mary Todd Lincoln.

    • @smastudiosproductions8713
      @smastudiosproductions8713 Před rokem +11

      It was the other way around, mary todd lincoln didn't like julia grant.

    • @xdanbo1859
      @xdanbo1859 Před rokem +1

      @@smastudiosproductions8713 I think it was a mutual. But it has been quite a while since I have watched a bio on Grant or Lincoln.

  • @Skip2105
    @Skip2105 Před rokem +18

    Such high quality content!

  • @Skip2105
    @Skip2105 Před rokem +37

    Pierce missed the point. Nobody wanted him to make a statement to show his service and loyalty to the country, it was because I man died

    • @jamieholtsclaw2305
      @jamieholtsclaw2305 Před rokem +9

      Pierce was defending himself and his house against an angry mob.

  • @buffmf
    @buffmf Před rokem +1

    Great video. Thank you.

  • @yolooo5081
    @yolooo5081 Před rokem +1

    Really well done video. Neat and concise presentation.

  • @jameshubert6103
    @jameshubert6103 Před rokem +16

    Poor Abraham, one of the best legal minds ever known

  • @sycowood65
    @sycowood65 Před rokem +10

    McKinley probably said “Oh dang I hope that doesn’t happen to me.”

  • @timothywilliams8530
    @timothywilliams8530 Před rokem

    That’s amazing that we have pictures like that!

  • @zeepsterd
    @zeepsterd Před rokem +7

    I love this channel.

  • @AxelSqueeze
    @AxelSqueeze Před rokem +9

    I like how in the picture of his funeral Theodore Roosevelt happens to be one of the unidentifiable specks in the window

  • @havehope646
    @havehope646 Před rokem +8

    This video seems well researched I like this video

  • @SusieAnderson-ds7dq
    @SusieAnderson-ds7dq Před 4 měsíci

    That was a Great Program!❤

  • @hansalexi
    @hansalexi Před 11 měsíci +1

    great video!

  • @Dlv924
    @Dlv924 Před rokem +1

    Excellent video.very interesting

  • @oakley4735
    @oakley4735 Před rokem +7

    This reminds me that humanity really doesn’t seem to change all that much as far as society goes…just substitute old things with their new equivalents and it seems almost the same.

  • @CJRealHoops1
    @CJRealHoops1 Před rokem +45

    0:52 Millard Fillmore in a military uniform looks like Alec Baldwin cast to play Millard Fillmore

  • @Connor-fj5rc
    @Connor-fj5rc Před 4 měsíci +1

    It’s incredible how much more eloquent and articulate politicians were in those days.

  • @reptar5.048
    @reptar5.048 Před rokem +7

    Email Vlogging through history and have him do some reactions, might build a like minded audience! Great content

  • @PoliticsMadeSimple
    @PoliticsMadeSimple Před rokem +4

    Good video 👍

  • @hildaenjoyer8862
    @hildaenjoyer8862 Před rokem +12

    The thumbnail makes it look like Lincoln is commenting on himself after his own death.

  • @o5-1-formerlycalvinlucien60

    I love how in the 1800s people can just, message the president about an appointment, without having a dozen men in black guarding and listening to every word the guest says.

  • @whatinthewhatnow5167
    @whatinthewhatnow5167 Před 10 měsíci +2

    How is this page not bigger?

  • @kevinp.h8655
    @kevinp.h8655 Před rokem +62

    Now we need a “How other presidents reacted to JFK’s death” video

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 Před rokem +2

      I know how they act toTRUMP, JOY, JOY, JOY!

    • @99mrpogi
      @99mrpogi Před rokem +4

      How other presidents reacted to James Garfield or William McKinley's assassinations

    • @ATvlogs872
      @ATvlogs872 Před rokem

      And FDR

  • @uv-al
    @uv-al Před rokem

    Great video, but i can't deal with the fact the audio is panned to my left.

  • @redjirachi1
    @redjirachi1 Před rokem +77

    Seance: What was your reaction to your death?
    Lincoln's ghost: I found it pretty rude all things considering. I was really into the play and some theatre geek took me out of it!
    Booth's damned soul: Who are you calling geek you scruffy-bearded wannabe bartender?!
    Lincoln's ghost: *Bartender?!* Why if we weren't dead I'd kick your arse!

    • @xhagast
      @xhagast Před rokem +24

      More likely, Lincoln's ghost: "I made many happy selling liquor sir, you made no man happy by killing me."
      Lincoln was a mild man with no animosity toward anybody. Although he WAS strong enough to kick Booth's booty even as an old man.

    • @pocketmarcy6990
      @pocketmarcy6990 Před rokem +13

      Lincoln would absolutely have bodied Booth 1 on 1

    • @edmeister4031
      @edmeister4031 Před rokem +5

      @@pocketmarcy6990 I mean, he was a wrestler, and supposedly won over 300 matches, losing only a handful. Lincoln really was a badass.

    • @PreziesLover327
      @PreziesLover327 Před rokem +1

      @@edmeister4031 Abraham--a true Wrestling Hall of Famer!!

  • @matthewdavid6134
    @matthewdavid6134 Před rokem +4

    I would love reactions of confederates to Lincolns death, were they happy, or afraid of reprecussions? Also at 7:19 Garfeild was so fucking accurate and articulate with why Lincoln was killed, makes me like him more.

  • @shuhratkessikbayev8886
    @shuhratkessikbayev8886 Před rokem +6

    Knowing Woodrow Wilson I doubt that racist would ever have anything nice to say about Lincoln.

  • @nerad1994
    @nerad1994 Před rokem +1

    Mr. Beat would love this video

  • @antoniasealey
    @antoniasealey Před rokem +1

    According to this heree video. I. Love. President. A. Lincoln. He's. Quotes. Was. Amazing. That's. Why. They. Call. Him. Honest. Able. He. Was. Honest!!!! Thanks for sharing ❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏💯💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @howdydoo9148
    @howdydoo9148 Před rokem +4

    Damn Garfield was spitting bars in that first quote

  • @LeftoverPat
    @LeftoverPat Před 7 měsíci +1

    Garfield's statement was GOAT. Really makes me wish we could've seen him serve longer.

  • @ReggieT98
    @ReggieT98 Před rokem +6

    THIS should be taught in schools

  • @woozy7405
    @woozy7405 Před rokem +7

    "Towards the end he advocated for generosity for the south, putting him at odds with the administration" Wym? Generosity for the south after the war's end was Lincoln's position

    • @Taz_XE076
      @Taz_XE076 Před rokem +1

      No it wasn't, his policy of tariffs aimed to keep the south poor lasted YEARS after his death and Lincoln PERSONALLY ordered General Sherman to DESTROY southern towns and villages so the south couldn't rebuild quickly after the war

    • @woozy7405
      @woozy7405 Před rokem

      ​@@Taz_XE076 Did you read? I said AFTER the war. The radicals of his party wanted him to push the South harder for readmission, Lincoln wanted them restored on the best terms they could ask for and as soon as possible. Tariffs by the way were aimed at protecting Northern industry from European competitors so the Union economy wouldn't collapse, *during* the war. And if you don't know your history, Lincoln had a bit of a hole in his head once the war was over so the harsher reconstruction by the radical republicans in congress wasn't his problem.

  • @Ab_linc
    @Ab_linc Před rokem +3

    Thank you all

    • @matthewhedrichjr.5445
      @matthewhedrichjr.5445 Před rokem

      U deserve to be a great president and Buchanan as the most corrupt president ever

  • @cald1421
    @cald1421 Před rokem +5

    6:22 I never knew this!
    Imagine the horror if Grant AND Lincoln were killed! There’d be chaos and anarchy in the south and who knows maybe another war!

  • @scottaznavourian3720
    @scottaznavourian3720 Před 7 měsíci +4

    No mr pierce. . This war is pretty much all your own fault

  • @gavinsinkula5345
    @gavinsinkula5345 Před rokem

    You should do something about the other presidential assassinations or potential assassination

  • @mushroomy9899
    @mushroomy9899 Před rokem +9

    I recently traced my family back and discovered that I was related to Abraham Lincolns mother. I find this very interesting, my grandma also thought this was cool.

    • @eatmynutsarchmage4883
      @eatmynutsarchmage4883 Před rokem +1

      thats super cool

    • @mushroomy9899
      @mushroomy9899 Před rokem

      @@eatmynutsarchmage4883 thank you! I also apparently had an even further back relative that fought in Washington’s army, he was killed near the end of the war and his daughter outlived him as an astounding 92 years old. She died when she was hit by a biker.

    • @Bixen_Bings
      @Bixen_Bings Před rokem

      For him to turn out like that, his mother must have been Mother Teresa

    • @mushroomy9899
      @mushroomy9899 Před rokem

      @@Bixen_Bings I’m actually like 14% Albanian and 34% Macedonian lol

  • @namb.
    @namb. Před rokem

    1:36 I'm sorry, but did you say *Glincoln* ?

  • @kevinstidham7321
    @kevinstidham7321 Před 3 měsíci +1

    One thing that should have probably been mentioned is that Pierce had sent Lincoln a very empathetic letter a few years earlier, after the death of Willie Lincoln in 1862. Willie Lincoln was the same age as Benjamin Pierce had been when he died in 1853.
    The sincerity of the letter is touching and that seems to include Pierce’s statement of feeling Lincoln’s unique suffering as he (and his wife) couldn’t help but remember their own tragedy (“I felt your grief”).
    Lincoln’s reply is apparently lost, but reading the letter leaves no doubt that he must have been extremely moved. How many people could understand the burden of being President while being overwhelmed by the personal loss of a beloved child?
    “Even in this hour, so full of danger to our Country, and of trial and anxiety to all good men, your thoughts, will be, of your cherished boy, who will nestle at your heart”
    He signed the letter as “Yr friend … Franklin Pierce”
    So the natural idea that Pierce let the political differences affect whether he felt sorrowful upon Lincoln’s death, probably has no merit to it.
    Interesting thought that doesn’t at first seem obvious: Pierce’s own experience probably left him with a unique and deeply-rooted perspective regarding personal mourning and the sphere of politics.
    www.loc.gov/resource/mal.1479200/?st=text&r=-0.063,-0.604,1,1.207,0

    • @resyndicated
      @resyndicated  Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks for sharing. I've heard this story, and I think it's really interesting. There's a lot of information on Pierce's activity during the Civil War, and I plan to cover some of it throughout other videos. For example, I did a video on Pierce's planned meeting of the former presidents. I'd like to do one on his letter to Lincoln about Willie at some point. For this video, I wanted to keep each entry relatively brief and focused, but I do plan to come back to some of these topics in the future.

  • @kayzeaza
    @kayzeaza Před rokem +54

    Ironic that Pierce thinks the civil war is all on Lincoln hahahaha

    • @user-yf6zz3cl8i
      @user-yf6zz3cl8i Před rokem

      Why is that?

    • @kayzeaza
      @kayzeaza Před rokem +22

      @@user-yf6zz3cl8i because Pierce did nothing to stop the war, he didn’t do anything at all really

    • @edixonvc5101
      @edixonvc5101 Před rokem

      @@kayzeaza his son got decapitated in front on him and got into heavy drinking he really wasn’t in the right state of mind

    • @kayzeaza
      @kayzeaza Před rokem +16

      @@edixonvc5101 okay, I still don’t see how the war was Lincoln’s fault?

    • @Asterion_Mol0c
      @Asterion_Mol0c Před rokem +3

      @@kayzeaza The South shot first the north didn't start the war

  • @avant4035
    @avant4035 Před rokem +15

    Greatest legal mind I ever knew.

    • @KobyOwen
      @KobyOwen Před rokem +7

      RIP Abraham McGill

    • @blackopsguy1023
      @blackopsguy1023 Před rokem

      Like a chimp with a Dillinger!

    • @TheJudoJoker
      @TheJudoJoker Před rokem +4

      @@KobyOwen I'm just here to speak with my lawyers - Lalo Booth

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 Před rokem

      Lincoln was the greatest, TRUMP was the worst, if you were to ask me, OR 90 PERCENT OF THE REST OF THE INTELLEGENT PEOPLE!

  • @mattmc5069
    @mattmc5069 Před 2 měsíci

    What did Robert Lee say? Or Longstreet? I wonder how they felt about that whole situation

  • @tr7b410
    @tr7b410 Před rokem +1

    The conflicted nature of the political landscape during Lincolns tenure sounds strangely familiar.

  • @Sly88Frye
    @Sly88Frye Před rokem +2

    I'm glad that even former presidents and future ones who didn't exactly agree with Abraham Lincoln still mourned him

    • @resyndicated
      @resyndicated  Před rokem

      If you're curious, "The Presidents' War" by Chris DeRose discusses the relationship between Lincoln and other presidents extensively. Really gives a better idea of just how much bitterness Pierce had towards Lincoln. It's harder to tell how Fillmore and Buchanan felt about him.

  • @marsmaniac1
    @marsmaniac1 Před rokem +1

    This same format could be done with JFK, great job on this video.

  • @billnotice9957
    @billnotice9957 Před rokem +2

    Just imagine in 100 years how future leaders will be pulled out of the crowd via multiple media. (Example T.R Roosevelt @ 9:35.)

  • @shb1033
    @shb1033 Před rokem

    I noticed that Franklin pierce looks similar to john booth in the first picture especially, it might just be that they have similar hairstyles of the time period.

  • @Johnonayacht
    @Johnonayacht Před rokem +6

    Still don't know why George Santos shot Lincoln.

  • @beavercontrol1743
    @beavercontrol1743 Před rokem +13

    could you do a video on The presidents of the United States in Congress Assembled? they arent POTUS's but they're still important figures

  • @johnpatterson8697
    @johnpatterson8697 Před rokem +11

    I bet Andrew Jackson's take would be funny

    • @jeremyc6054
      @jeremyc6054 Před rokem +5

      "what, he didn't catch the bullets with his hand and then beat the snot out of the guy?"

  • @birdwife589
    @birdwife589 Před rokem +1

    quite the calamity!

  • @jordansweet8054
    @jordansweet8054 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Pierce standing up to a mob that comes to his house is somehow more boss than anything he actually did in office.

  • @Tom-TV-vl4to
    @Tom-TV-vl4to Před 3 měsíci +1

    do a video of U.S president reacting to William McKinley's death

  • @DW-nb2zc
    @DW-nb2zc Před rokem +5

    Pierce was not going to be intimidated.

  • @TnseWlms
    @TnseWlms Před rokem +1

    Did anyone ever ask Mrs. Lincoln, "Apart from that, how was the play?"

  • @froyboy267
    @froyboy267 Před rokem

    What was Jefferson Davis' reaction to Lincoln's death?

  • @ballinjesus8175
    @ballinjesus8175 Před rokem +3

    "He's right behind me isn't he?"
    -Abraham lincoln

  • @discocorco
    @discocorco Před rokem

    9:37 I shouted an explicative. Unreal.

  • @pabloni1117
    @pabloni1117 Před rokem +11

    7:50 based Garfield

  • @charlesharris9965
    @charlesharris9965 Před rokem +4

    What did Jefferson Davis have to say about Lincoln's death?

  • @brennonguilbeau569
    @brennonguilbeau569 Před rokem +5

    0:56 if I recall correctly, the Lincoln administration was planning on a generous treatment of the South, so I don't understand the narrator's comment.

    • @DeezNuggz
      @DeezNuggz Před rokem +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @johndonovan5752
      @johndonovan5752 Před rokem

      Right you are! Lincoln urged reconciliation, but the so-called "Radical Republicans" urged a tougher line.

    • @DovahFett
      @DovahFett Před rokem +8

      Lincoln was an unknown quantity to a lot of people. When it came to the issues of slavery, the South, and Reconstruction he typically towed a very fine line. Like the narrator mentioned, Lincoln was criticized by his own party for being both too harsh and too lenient towards the South before he had even done anything. People from different parts of the political spectrum liked to guess at how Lincoln would act, but none of them were very good at it. He was a very cautious person who put a lot of thought and planning into his positions before declaring them publicly.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před rokem

      @@DovahFett Well said!

  • @TheGroundedAviator
    @TheGroundedAviator Před rokem

    The whole world expressed the same feelings.

  • @HerrZhukov
    @HerrZhukov Před rokem +4

    Considering Wilson was a known confederate apologist, I doubt his reaction to Lincoln’s death would be particularly negative, but I guess we’ll never know.

    • @PreziesLover327
      @PreziesLover327 Před rokem +1

      Wilson was only 8, and probably had little memory if at all of what he thought of Lincoln when he was living.

    • @HerrZhukov
      @HerrZhukov Před rokem

      @@PreziesLover327 Right. My take was only speculative while taking into account Wilson's irl politics.

    • @PreziesLover327
      @PreziesLover327 Před rokem

      @@HerrZhukov What does irl stand for?

    • @boopdino8053
      @boopdino8053 Před rokem

      @@PreziesLover327
      In real life.
      Their point was that if he would have been older,his reaction probably would not have been negative because of his policies later on

  • @bruceellenburg429
    @bruceellenburg429 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Abraham Lincoln, the GOAT

    • @matthewhedrichjr.5445
      @matthewhedrichjr.5445 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yep but not when he first took office at first but not as bad compared to his corrupt predecessor and traitor James Buchanan who refused to confront serious problems and ran on one of the most corrupt administrations, as stated by the Covode Committee who tried to impeach him. Same can apply to another do nothing president, Franklin Pierce. Dr. Charles Leale tried to save Lincoln and took good care of him until he died. Shows that Lincoln is overrated and Buchanan was nothing but a traitor to the Union

  • @lmaooyy
    @lmaooyy Před rokem +1

    You should do this but with the reactions of Kennedys assassination

  • @user-ox8gl5rk8n
    @user-ox8gl5rk8n Před rokem

    turn on subtitles!

  • @PriceDeepfakes
    @PriceDeepfakes Před rokem +2

    Two of these presidents would actually get assassinated themselves later in life😢

  • @Weeblicker
    @Weeblicker Před rokem +2

    interesting that pierce would deem the civil war unnecessary and hurtful to the country having served in the Mexican-American war, a more unnecessary and hurtful war.